Pre-contact Prior to European contact, the point and the area around it were inhabited by the
Quinault people. There are a variety of names for different features of the headland in the
Quinault language. The southern face is called
a’tsak, meaning "Inside Point," the north face is called
o’lȧmixʷci’tks, meaning "Soft Sand Point". The sea stacks off shore were also named and frequently included in the stories of the Quinault. The tallest rock is called ''ma'tsactsiolxk'', meaning "
Shag's house." Another rock offshore is believed to be the remains of a woman who waited for a husband on a seal-hunt who never returned. Point Grenville and Grenville Bay are spiritually significant to the Quinault people, with the point held as a sacred location for
rites of passage, in particular rites of
female puberty. The next day, a smaller party came ashore to resupply. Quadra reports that this smaller party of six men was attacked by a group of several hundred Quinaults who killed four and wounded the other two such that they succumbed to their injuries while swimming back to the ships. More of the local Quinault then surrounded the ships in canoes as they made an effort to depart through the shoals of the bay. Quadra called the spot
Punta de los Mártires ("Point of the Martyrs") after the Spanish sailors killed in the Quinault attack. In November 1989, the state of Washington placed a historical marker at Point Grenville in recognition of the state's centennial and the first Europeans to reach its shores.
Vancouver expedition and naming The
1791-1795 expedition of
George Vancouver passed by on April 28, 1792. Vancouver listed the promontory as Point Grenville on his charts after
William Wyndham Grenville, 1st Baron Grenville, then
Leader of the House of Lords and
Foreign Secretary of the United Kingdom. He was a close personal friend of Vancouver who had just been raised to
peerage before the expedition set out. Vancouver published a profile engraving of the point, created by draughtsman
Benjamin Thomas Pouncy, in his work recollecting the expedition,
A Voyage of Discovery. That same year, during the
Nootka Crisis, Spanish explorers
Dionisio Alcalá Galiano and
Cayetano Valdés encountered the point en route to
Nootka Sound and called it
Punta de la Bastida ("Point of the Bastion"), owing to its
fort-like appearance.
20th century In 1919, the point was listed as "reserved for lighthouse purposes" on a plat map, but no lighthouse was built at that time. A
fire lookout tower called Point Grenville Lookout was established up the windward slope to the east of the point prior to 1930, when an access road was constructed. In 1953, the structure was described as a 77 foot steel tower steel structure with 4 steel legs, but by 1962 the
Washington State Highway Commission reported that it was abandoned and in disrepair. As of 2020, the structure is no longer extant, though there are still footings and rotted wood present where it once stood. Located at the heart of the
Graveyard of the Pacific, Grenville Bay has been the site of many shipwrecks over the years, largely as a result of the same shoals noted by Bodega y Quadra and Heceta in 1775. One notable wreck near the point was that of the freighter SS
Seagate in 1956. Beginning in June 1945, a
United States Coast Guard LORAN-A (long-range) hyperbolic radio station for offshore navigation was located at the point. It began as a Mobile Unit, but permanent buildings were erected in 1946, and re-constructed in 1954. The first pulse recurrence rates were 2H4, paired with
Cape Blanco, Oregon and 2H5, paired with Spring Island, British Columbia (near
Kyuquot) but in 1971 these were changed to broadcast at 1L0 and 1L1, respectively. The first lighthouse at the point, Point Grenville Light, was erected in 1967 (LLNR 109). After a reduction in scale at the LORAN station beginning in 1976, operations (including the COOP site) fully ceased in December 1979, and the station was officially disestablished in March 1980. The light was automated from that point on. At its peak in 1948, the station was home to one
commissioned officer and 19 enlisted personnel. The 1974 film
McQ, starring
John Wayne, was filmed in part at Point Grenville. == Ecology ==